She shook her head.
“Well, I’ll be wanting to talk to him.”
“He wasn’t here when I found the candles.”
“Nonetheless…”
He left the word hanging as he turned to make his way toward the steps. Halfway there, he backtracked and picked up his hat, folding the brim back as he looked at her. Then he turned away again.
“Detective?” she found herself saying as he climbed the first couple of stairs.
He slowed his steps then stopped, apparently waiting for her to continue.
Josie swallowed hard, realizing she had nearly told him of the late-night phone calls.
“Would you like something to drink? A tea, perhaps?”
“Yes. I’d like that. I’ll take it in the courtyard when I’m done.”
DREW STOOD AT THE PAY PHONE in Jackson Square waiting to be put through to his client. He watched people pass, some natives, most tourists, then glanced toward Bourbon Street a couple blocks up from where Hotel Josephine was located. He hadn’t slept well last night. He couldn’t get his mind off what had happened after he’d left, but more importantly, what had occurred after his return.
Josie didn’t trust him. He knew it wasn’t because he’d tipped his hand. Rather, Josie seemed to be naturally wary of letting anyone too close. He supposed that was due in part to the strong women in her family. As far as he could tell, the past four generations of Villefranche women had had no men in their lives. They’d been fiercely independent and it was only natural that Josie had inherited that trait.
But that made his job all the more difficult.
His client finally came on the line.
“Hello, Morrison,” he said.
Drew got straight to the point. “Who else you got working this case?”
Silence, then, “What makes you ask that?”
“Just answer the question.”
Nothing.
“Look, the person is making my job next to impossible and is only guaranteeing Josie Villefranche won’t sell.”
“More’s the pity.”
Drew let loose a series of curses after putting his hand over the receiver.
“Morrison, we don’t have anyone else on the case.”
His movements stilled.
If there was no one else working the case, then that meant the happenings last night had nothing to do with forcing Josie to sell and everything to do with scaring her.
“Close the deal, Morrison. You have three days.”
Drew hung up the phone then rubbed his hand over the back of his neck. Three days. Such a short time. But if he didn’t make the deadline, he wouldn’t get paid.
And, more importantly, he wouldn’t get a shot at the next contract he wanted.
He strode purposefully down toward Bourbon Street and the hotel.
DUE TO ALL THE ACTIVITY, Josie hadn’t had a chance to distribute the Stay One Night, Get One Night Free coupons she’d made up. She stood at the front desk, fingering the slips of paper, trying to ignore that ten minutes ago a couple of police crime-scene investigators had quietly come in and joined Detective Chevalier upstairs. Philippe had yet to show and she was worried about him.
And Drew…
She took a deep breath and placed the coupons under the desk where she could easily access them later. Drew was an unknown quantity she really didn’t have the time to consider now. Sure, she’d had mind-blowing sex with him, but she’d gone into it knowing that there was no future beyond that moment. And now that the future had arrived in all its frightening glory, her mind needed to be on the matter at hand, not remembering the way it had felt to have Drew’s mouth slide down over her shoulder, dampening her skin and igniting nerve endings that seemed to lead straight between her legs.
She picked up her granme’s hand fan and waved it in front of her flushed face as she sat down, watching the current of people move past her front door without a glance her way.
There were times throughout her life when she’d sat just as she was now, watching the people walk by and feeling like she was being left behind somehow. Like each person represented the ticking of a clock. There went an hour. Six hours. A day.
Usually it didn’t bother her much, the sensation of standing still while time marched on. But lately she’d begun to know a tinge of restlessness. Was she doing what she wanted to be doing? Was marriage something she was even remotely interested in? Did she want a child?
The questions lurked beneath the surface and chose times like these to rise and haunt her.
She’d never really considered the child question seriously. Sure, she’d had her collection of dolls when she was a girl, but given her connection to the hotel, she’d never been around children much. Besides, since hitting puberty, the focus had been on not getting pregnant and “ending up like her mother, stuck with a kid to raise and no man around to help.” Her granme had never said anything along those lines; her mother had, but her grandmother had strongly cautioned her to avoid pregnancy. Getting knocked up had been ranked right up there with driving drunk or taking drugs.
Still, did she want at least one child of her own?
And if she did, what were her options except to raise it herself, alone, without the help of a man?
Drew came to mind and she closed her eyes as much to banish the image as cherish it.
What did it matter anyway? The way things stood right now, she wouldn’t be able to take care of herself financially. To even consider adding a child to the mix was ridiculous and irresponsible and the ultimate in selfishness.
Footsteps on the lobby floor.
“Uh-huh. The rumors are right,” her friend Anne-Marie said, looking warily around the lobby. “You got the voodoo but good.”
9
DREW HAD WANTED TO MAKE a beeline straight for Josie when he’d returned to the hotel, but was thwarted by the presence of a woman who had to be around Josie’s age but looked at least thirty years older. It was more than the colorful turban and the loose-fitting long dress. Her haunted eyes were older than her years.
Josie sat with the dark woman in the courtyard, tiny coffee cups between them, the other woman’s many bracelets jangling as she gestured with her hands while she spoke. Josie sat back, seeming amused by what her companion had to say, but also paying attention.
Drew stepped into the courtyard.
Josie looked at him, and the woman she was with studied him with a guarded expression.
“Drew,” Josie greeted.
“Sorry, I didn’t mean to interrupt.”
“Come. I’d like you to meet an old friend of mine. Anne-Marie Paré, this is Drew Morrison. He’s a…guest at the hotel. The only guest actually.”
Anne-Marie extended her hand toward him. Drew took it, noticing the cracked red nail polish she wore and the ashy appearance of her skin.
“A pleasure,” he said.
“Hmm,” Anne-Marie responded, her dark eyes intense as she looked him over. “I’d say Mr. Morrison here is more than a guest.”
Josie smiled. “Anne-Marie is a voodoo priestess.”
“Ah,” Drew said, extracting his hand from the uncanny woman’s bony grasp.
“Miss Villefranche?”
Josie looked over his shoulder to where a man stood wearing a wrinkled gray trench coat and holding a fedora.
“Detective Chevalier.”
“Do you have a moment?”
Josie excused herself, leaving Drew with Anne-Marie and her unsettling eyes.
“Please,” she said, indicating the chair across from her with a jangling motion of her hand. “Sit.”
“I’M GOING TO GO NOW,” Chevalier told Josie. “But my men will be upstairs for a little while longer.”
“Fine.”
He regarded the small notebook he held and squinted at her. “Is there anything else you’d like to add to what the responding police officer reported last night?”
Josie dropped her gaze then shook her head.
“No unusual characters hanging around?”